Explaining the decrease in U.S. deaths from coronary disease, 1980-2000
Earl S Ford, Umed A Ajani, Janet B Croft, Julia A Critchley, Darwin R Labarthe, Thomas E Kottke, Wayne H Giles, Simon Capewell, Earl S Ford, Umed A Ajani, Janet B Croft, Julia A Critchley, Darwin R Labarthe, Thomas E Kottke, Wayne H Giles, Simon Capewell
Abstract
Background: Mortality from coronary heart disease in the United States has decreased substantially in recent decades. We conducted a study to determine how much of this decrease could be explained by the use of medical and surgical treatments as opposed to changes in cardiovascular risk factors.
Methods: We applied a previously validated statistical model, IMPACT, to data on the use and effectiveness of specific cardiac treatments and on changes in risk factors between 1980 and 2000 among U.S. adults 25 to 84 years old. The difference between the observed and expected number of deaths from coronary heart disease in 2000 was distributed among the treatments and risk factors included in the analyses.
Results: From 1980 through 2000, the age-adjusted death rate for coronary heart disease fell from 542.9 to 266.8 deaths per 100,000 population among men and from 263.3 to 134.4 deaths per 100,000 population among women, resulting in 341,745 fewer deaths from coronary heart disease in 2000. Approximately 47% of this decrease was attributed to treatments, including secondary preventive therapies after myocardial infarction or revascularization (11%), initial treatments for acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina (10%), treatments for heart failure (9%), revascularization for chronic angina (5%), and other therapies (12%). Approximately 44% was attributed to changes in risk factors, including reductions in total cholesterol (24%), systolic blood pressure (20%), smoking prevalence (12%), and physical inactivity (5%), although these reductions were partially offset by increases in the body-mass index and the prevalence of diabetes, which accounted for an increased number of deaths (8% and 10%, respectively).
Conclusions: Approximately half the decline in U.S. deaths from coronary heart disease from 1980 through 2000 may be attributable to reductions in major risk factors and approximately half to evidence-based medical therapies.
Copyright 2007 Massachusetts Medical Society.
Source: PubMed
今後の臨床試験
-
NCT07643766まだ募集していません
-
NCT07643779まだ募集していません筋骨格痛 | 身体活動 | 胃食道逆流症(GERD) | 症状
-
NCT07643792まだ募集していません術後の痛み | 高齢者 | 股関節骨折手術 | 腸骨筋ブロック | リポソームブピバカイン
-
NCT07643818まだ募集していません心不全(HFpEF、収縮機能は保たれているが拡張機能障害を伴う)
-
NCT07643857まだ募集していません
-
NCT07643896募集異数性 | 22q11.2 欠失症候群 | 18トリソミー | 13トリソミー | 性染色体異常 | ダウン症(21トリソミー) | Pregnant Individuals
-
NCT07643922まだ募集していませんくも膜下出血、動脈瘤 | くも膜下出血後の脳血管痙攣
-
NCT07643935まだ募集していません